| John Armitage on Sat, 12 Sep 1998 21:47:34 +0200 (MET DST) |
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| <nettime> TONI NEGRI: BETWEEN "HISTORIC COMPROMISE" AND TERRORISM |
Hi Nettimers,
Some of you may not have seen the latest communique from Toni Negri
below. Enjoy.
John Armitage
========================================================
LE MONDE DIPLOMATIQUE - August-September 1998
BETWEEN "HISTORIC COMPROMISE" AND TERRORISM
Reviewing the experience of Italy in the
1970s
Toni Negri was one of the historic leadership of the Italian
revolutionary group Potere Operaio (Workers' Power) and is
currently serving a prison sentence in Rebibbia prison, Rome.
Negri gave himself up on 1 July 1997 after 14 years' exile in
Paris in a bid to close a chapter in his own personal "judicial
history" and that of other far-left militants still in exile.
Originally sentenced to 30 years' imprisonment for "armed
insurrection against the state" and to four and a half years for
"moral responsibility" for the clashes between revolutionary
activists and police in Milan between 1973 and 1977, he
theoretically still has over four years to serve. Waiting for a
general remission (indulto) from the Italian parliament which has
not as yet materialised, he was authorised to work on day-release
at the end of July. In the following article, he recalls the
political experience of the 1970s in Italy
by TONI NEGRI *
To speak of what the 1970s represented in Italy's political
history is to speak also of the present. In part, because the
consequences of the repressive policies of those years are still
very much with us. The Special Laws have not been repealed, at
least 200 people are still in prison and about the same number
are living their lives in exile(1). Also, because the
disintegration of the post-war political system, shattered to
pieces by the fall of the Berlin Wall, had reached intolerable
limits. But above all, because the social (and psychological)
traumas of that decade have still not been healed or distanced.
The 1970s are still with us in the sense that they posed for
Italy the problem of how to arrive at models of democratic
representation in a context in which the social modes of
production are being transformed. This is a central problem for
advanced capitalist societies and it has still not been resolved.
In Italy, the way in which that problem presented itself took a
distinctly tragic turn.
All the political forces that were involved in this drama were,
in the end, defeated. Two writers have done more than anyone else
to describe the roots of this tragedy: Leonardo Sciascia (2) and
Rossana Rossanda (3). Sciascia was an able chronicler of events
and revealed to the world the labyrinthine inner workings of the
crisis; Rossanda, maintaining her political commitment
throughout, reported every day on the desperate powerlessness of
the protagonists to reach any kind of solution.
In Italy, the 1970s actually began in 1967-68 and ended in 1983.
In 1967-68, as in all the developed countries, the student
movement took to the barricades. However, the breadth and impact
of this part of the movement was not as extensive as in other
European countries: in Italy, the student May 1968 was not a
particularly significant moment.
But the same cannot be said of the broader picture: in effect,
the movement opened a breach in the system of power, and into
this breach was swallowed, in successive waves, the social
movement that developed in protest against a system which was
increasingly falling behind in modernising capitalism, and was
repressing the democratic potential inherited from the
anti-fascist struggle and the Resistance.
What happened then was that, after the students, other social
protagonists emerged to make their mark on the political scene.
For example, 1969 was the year of the factory working class, with
new Factory Councils (consigli di fabbrica) emerging, an
egalitarian movement fighting for equal wage rises for all, and a
deregulation of capitalist policy towards the labour market. This
phase of struggle was crowned by the achievement of the statuto
dei lavoratori ("workers' statute"). Immediately after this, came
the legalisation of divorce, the implementation of regional
decentralisation, the recognition of conscientious objection and
large numbers of legislative innovations which "unfroze" the old
post-war society. In other words, there were a variety of
institutional responses to the continuous unfolding of struggles
- not only of students or factory workers - that had been opened
by 1968.
The "strategy of tension"
In around 1973-74, the framework began to change. Up till that
point, the relationship between the social movements and the
"left" as a totality had, despite passing difficulties, been
essentially dialectical. After the oil crisis of 1973 and the
first capitalist counter-offensives, things changed. The Italian
parliamentary left broke off dialogue with the new social forces,
and the majority component of that left, the Italian Communist
Party (PCI), proposed a "historic compromise" (compromesso
storico) with its long-time adversaries, the Christian Democrats
(DC).
Now, it is worth remembering that the Italian political system of
that time was characterised, for reasons related to Italy's
position within the cold war scenario (4), as an "imperfect
two-party system" (bipartitismo imperfetto). In other words, in
the normal run of parliamentary life, there was a convention that
the PCI was to be excluded: whatever gains it may have made in
electoral terms, the party of Enrico Berlinguer (5) was excluded
from power, and that power was conceived as remaining in the
hands of the Christian Democracy, ostensibly a bastion of Western
values. However, despite this institutional constraint, the DC
and the PCI had contrived to create a system of power which made
possible a degree of equilibrium, and which offered a chance of
moderating social conflicts when they broke out. Thus, alongside
this "imperfect two-party system" we had what was called at the
time an "imperfect co-associationism" (coassociativismo
imperfetto).
At the start of the 1970s, building on the base of a growing
electoral power which it was acquiring from the development of
these social movements, the PCI decided that it was time for it
to play a bigger role in the parliamentary majority. From now on,
it presented itself not merely as a "party of struggle", but as a
"party of struggle and government". From 1973-74 onwards,
parliament appeared to be operating on this basis with a degree
of unanimity. In 1978 the PCI went so far as to offer active
support to the new government. And in so doing, it was to step
down from the last remaining controlling functions which were
assigned to it under the "imperfect two-party system", as the
political representative of the opposition. The
"co-associationism" became "perfect".
The four years from 1974 to 1978 saw a progressive tightening of
the alliance between the DC and the PCI: this alliance extended
outwards from government and parliament to the whole system of
power, from the central administration out to the periphery, to
the trade unions, to the running of communications and the media
and even, remarkably, to the police. However, at the same time
Italy's broadly-based social struggles were becoming more intense
and the social movements broke definitively with all forms of
institutional representation. We should not forget that these
were battles of enormous extent and massive intensity.
Beyond the simple exercise of that "counter-power" which they had
embodied since 1968, the social movements were also nurtured by
the consequences of Italy's monetary deflation policies and by
the industrial restructuring through which an initial - but
definitive - "emergence from Fordism" was taking place, in terms
of Italy's systems of manufacture and production. As it happened,
the "historic compromise" was built around precisely these
"austerity policies" against which the social protest movements
were being organised.
Thus, when the repression - repression by the employers in the
factories and repression by the police in society as a whole,
making use of a whole new range of laws - stepped over the line
and went beyond the bounds of democracy, the resistance in turn
began to arm itself. The Red Brigades, for instance, initially
emerged from among workers in the large factories in the north,
which had been subjected to savage restructuring (6); and it was
in these same factories, or in the communities associated with
them, that practices of "proletarian justice", sometimes at the
mass level and sometimes clandestine, began to appear.
A further independent and over-determined variable should be
added to this interweaving of social and political components,
which from this point onwards was continuously being crossed and
recrossed by an uninterrupted series of working-class struggles
and manifestations of urban violence. This new element was the
direct provocation - for which I would argue that the only
appropriate term is "terrorism" - on the part of the state organs
charged with maintaining NATO interests before, during and after
the "historic compromise".
After the Milan bombing of 1969, terrorist operations by these
state apparatuses continued, year after year, and included the
bombing of demonstrations and public meetings, and the bombing of
trains and stations, which culminated in the appalling Bologna
bombing in 1980 (7). (To date not one of the perpetrators or
organisers of these massacres has been imprisoned). Criminal
actions of this kind obviously added fuel to the fires of a
Resistance which was only fighting for the right to
self-expression, and had the means to do so.
In 1977, the movement experienced a major flare-up in Bologna, a
city which was a showcase for the Communist Party's municipal
policies. At the end of a demonstration, yet another left-wing
militant was killed by the police. Rioting broke out. The
communist mayor and the "historic compromise" government sent
armoured cars to sweep away the barricades. In that same period,
the national secretary of the communist trade union (CGIL) was
chased off the campus of the University of Rome, after violent
clashes, by a mass student movement which by then had extended to
include the urban proletariat.
In Milan, Turin, Naples and Padova, there were huge marches
during which, more and more frequently, armed extremist groupings
began to appear. They let it be known that they saw themselves as
valid components of the movement. Among the working class and the
urban proletarian movements, the resistance against restructuring
was growing irresistibly, within a climate of massive resentment
towards what people saw as betrayal by the official left. By this
time, Italy was virtually in a state of civil war. None of the
actors was any longer in control and this was a tragedy that was
to end in defeat. For everybody.
The first to be defeated were the social movements. Having cut
themselves off totally from the representatives of the
traditional left, which proved incapable of either providing
adequate political forms for the expression of counter-power or
of controlling it, the social movements were thus dragged into
the abyss of an extremism that was becoming increasingly blind
and violent. The kidnapping and killing of Aldo Moro (8) was the
beginning of the end for a movement which, in advancing its
military objectives, had lost the ability to assess the political
consequences of its actions. Caught in the grip of this crisis,
the political process which had created a substantial social
stratum of hundreds of thousands of activists and militants was
soon to be dissolved by a massive and powerful repression.
The political forces which embodied the "historic compromise"
were also searching for a way out of the social isolation in
which they now found themselves, but they did it by opting for
policies of repression pure and simple. They won, but it turned
out to be a Pyrrhic victory. We had the introduction of special
police, special prisons, special courts and trials, and special
emergency measures imposed by the government: what was
effectively a state of emergency ended by reshaping - and adding
to the isolation of - the constitutional structure of a political
system that had already been butchered by the previous realities
of "imperfect bipartitism".
All this had dramatic consquences. The first to suffer was the
PCI. In the years that followed, it came to be at the mercy of
the right and experienced a continuous decline in its electoral
support. At the same time, it failed to re-establish any kind of
contact with the social movements, which by then had become
politically marginalised. The Communist Party was to become
something which in its original glorious history it had never
previously been: a bureaucratic grouping, cut off from society
and locked into the machinery of power. The Christian Democrat
party, for its part, lost its central constitutional position
during the course of these developments. It became
inward-looking, concentrating on maintaining its local power
bases, and it was no longer capable of providing the means for an
understanding of the social and productive landscape from within
which the crisis had been created. It fell to the (socialist)
government of Bettino Craxi, which came to power in 1983, to
transform the isolation of the political classes into a massive
machinery of corruption and degradation of society and the state.
The 1970s had come to an end.
It is worth asking whether the 1970s could have created a
different outcome in the political situation and within the
political system of the time. The answer is yes, but only on one
condition: if there had been at that moment a mode of political
representation capable of absorbing the consequences of the very
profound social transformations that the movements were imposing.
No such thing existed at the time and subsequently the problem
was not posed.
Since the fall of the Berlin Wall and the radical restructuring
of the framework of Italy's parliamentary and political life, the
only impulses towards constitutional change that have emerged in
Italy (which, incidentally, have proved to be unrealisable, as is
confirmed by the constitutional reform project outlined by the
Bicameral Commission (9)) have focused on the upper echelons (on
changes in the presidential system) and, consequently, on the
setting-up of increasingly efficient and centralised instruments
of pre-emption, mediation and repression. There have been no
proposals for new forms of political representation or new
channels for substantive democracy. As for the activity of the
government, given the present realities of the Second Republic,
it has been concerned essentially with neutralising social
conflict and ensuring the compatibility of Italy's system with
the "world market".
The defeat of the movement of the 1970s - a defeat which was both
political (as in other European countries) and also military -
has not even remotely opened the way for a democratic renewal. It
is appropriate for those who were involved in those movements
(10) to bemoan their own tactical naivety and despair of their
strategic illusions, but they nevertheless have the right to
observe that the problem that we represented still exists. Today,
more than ever, Italy needs to rediscover the democratic values
that we were experimenting with in those years.
*Author of Revolution Retrieved, Red Notes, London 1979; The
Politics of Subversion, Polity Press, Cambridge, 1989; and The
Savage Anomaly, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 1991.
While in France, Toni Negri lectured at the Ecole normale
superieure in rue d'Ulm, and taught at the University of
Paris-VIII and the International College of Philosophy.
Translated by Ed Emery
(1) See Anne Schimel "Justice de plombe en Italie", Le Monde
diplomatique, April 1998.
(2) The writer, chronicler and journalist Leonardo Sciascia
(1921-89) observed Italian society, writing from his native
Sicily; his works include The Day of the Owl, To Each His Own and
The Night and Death, all published by Carcanet, London.
(3) Together with Luigi Pintor, Rossana Rossanda was the founder
of the Rome-based daily Il Manifesto, of which she is still the
editor today.
(4) See Francois Vitrani, "L'Italie, un Etat de 'souvranete
limite'?", Le Monde diplomatique, December 1990.
(5) Enrico Berlinguer followed Palmiro Togliatti and Luigi Longo
to become the third general secretary of the PCI in the post-war
period. After General Pinochet's coup d'etat in Chile, he put
forward the notion of the "historic compromise" (1973) and,
within Europe, created a "Eurocommunist" line that countered that
of Moscow.
(6) The Brigate Rosse (Red Brigades) were, like Prima Linea
(Front Line, 1976-80), armed organisations of the far left.
Operating at a more general political level were organisations
such as Lotta Continua (Fight On, 1969-76), Potere Operaio
(Workers' Power, 1969-73), Autonomia Operaia (Workers' Autonomy)
etc.
(7) The explosion of a bomb at the Agricultural Bank in Piazza
Fontana, Milan, on 12 December 1969 (with 16 dead and 98 wounded)
marked the start of the "strategy of tension" which was to
culminate in the bombing of Bologna Central Station on 2 August
1980 (85 dead and 200 wounded). In both these cases, as the legal
authorities subsequently confirmed, the authors of this blind
terrorism were the far right. According to statistics from the
Italian ministry of interior, 67.55% of violence ("affrays,
guerrilla actions and destruction of property") committed in
Italy between 1969 and 1980 were attributable to the far right,
26.5% to the far left, and 5.95% to others.
(8) At the moment of his kidnapping on 16 March 1978, Aldo Moro,
the president of the Christian Democrat Party, was negotiating
with Enrico Berlinguer on possible ways of bringing the PCI more
fully into government.
(9) The aim of the Bicameral Commission, under the presidency of
Massimo D'Alema, the head of the Party of Left Democracy
(ex-PCI), was to open negotiations for a constitutional reform
project which would lead, among other things, to universal
suffrage elections for the presidency of the republic and changes
in Italy's electoral system. Its work was terminated in May 1998
after a U-turn by Forza Italia's Silvio Berlusconi, who at one
time had endorsed the project.
(10) There is an English-language website dedicated to the
amnesty campaign and the political writings of Toni Negri:
http://lists.village.virginia.edu/~forks/
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED c 1998 Le Monde diplomatique
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